Updates to developers.google.com/web

We launched WebFundamentals two years ago to help
ensure that developers had the latest guidance on how to build great sites and
apps that worked well on desktop, but more importantly, on
mobile.

A lot has chanced since then, the mobile web experience
has improved dramatically and it's opened up a ton of new possibilities.
Service workers
let us build a web that is instant and reliable.
Progressive Web Apps raise the bar for building
amazing web experiences.

Last week, we launched a new visual design for WebFundamentals
to make it easier for you to find the content you're looking for, and get the
information you need. We updated content to ensure it's accurate and
added a number of new articles to help you build better web experiences and
amazing Progressive Web Apps.

Of course, we still have lots of work to do, there's new guidance that needs
to be developed, new content that needs to be written, and issues that need
to be fixed. But, we're working on it.

One of the goals for this update was to make it easier for you to
contribute. We've majorly simplified the development process, removing many
of the pre-req's that used to exist and shortened the deployment process. If
you find an issue, you can either file it in our
issue tracker or fix it
yourself and submit a pull request to our
WebFundamentals GitHub repository.

As we create and update developers.google.com/web
we also have to think about the future of our other resources. Many of you will
know that our team created and, through the community, supported the growth of
HTML5Rocks but over the last two years it has seen no updates. We've already
migrated updates.html5rocks.com to
Web Updates and we are working to move additional content
from HTML5Rocks to here. We've added support for HTTPS to HTML5Rocks, and
are commited to ensuring that the great content that's there, won't
disappear.

I personally want to thank our
contributors,
the developers who have helped translate
content, and you. Your feedback, bug reports, translations, new content,
questions, and the content you've contributed to HTML5Rocks and
WebFundamentals has been invaluable. We couldn't have done it without
your help! Thank you!